133 
2 C4 
py 1 



3 133 
.02 C4 
Dopy 1 



VEDANTA PHILOSOPHY 



LECTURE BY 



SWAMI ABHEDANANDA 



Christian Science and Vedanta 

DELIVERED UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE VEDANTA SOCIETY, 
AT CARNEGIE LYCEUM, NEW YORK 



Published by the Vedanta Society 

NEW YORK 



Copyright, 1902, by Swami Abhedananda, new york 



Price 10 Cents 



THE LIBRARY OF 
CONGRESS, 

Two Copies Received 

JAN. 15 1902 

Copyright entry 
CLASS Cf XX& wo. 

%r C 

COPY 






bfi 



l^ 



" The sensations of cold and heat, pleasure and pain are caused by the contact of 
transitory senses with unreal objects; they are, therefore, inconstant and ephemeral. 
O man ! endure them and be not happy or unhappy on their account. 

" He whom these disturb not, to whom pleasure and pain are the same, and who 
is self-controlled, is well fitted for freedom and immortality. 

" The Seers of truth realize: That which is unreal (transitory) hath no existence, 
while Reality never ceases to exist."— Bhagavad Gita y ch. If, li+, 15, 16. 



CHRISTIAN SCIENCE AND VEDANTA. 

Most startling are the similarities that exist between 
the fundamental principles of modern Christian Sci- 
ence and those of that ancient system of philosophy 
known in India as Vedanta. 

The followers of Christian Science, unacquainted 
with the Vedas and the religious teachings of India, 
may in all sincerity claim originality for their founder, 
Mrs. Mary Baker G. Eddy ; they may show their grati- 
tude to her for numerous benefits received; they may 
shut their eyes to all other systems of philosophy and 
religion ancient or modern ; their revealed text-book, 
" Science and Health," may change its tone by ad- 
ditions and alterations in every chapter of every new 
edition ; but Mrs. Eddy, herself, is fully aware that the 
truths which she claims to have discovered, were dis- 
covered and taught in India by the Hindu sages and 



2 VEDANTA PHILOSOPHY. 

philosophers centuries before Jesus the Christ ap- 
peared on earth. 

In the earliest edition of " Science and Health " Mrs. 
Eddy had the courage to quote certain passages from 
one of the most authentic books of the Vedanta phi- 
losophy, thus herself acknowledging the harmony that 
exists between the basic principles of the Vedanta phi- 
losophy and Christian Science. Unfortunately, for 
some reason, since the publication of the 34th edition, 
these passages have been omitted. In the 24th edition 
of " Science and Health," published in 1886, we find 
the 8th chapter devoted to Imposition and Demonstra- 
tion. This chapter has been entirely suppressed in 
later editions. It begins with four quotations. The 
second is from Sir Edwin Arnold's translation of the 
Bhagavad Gita, entitled " Song Celestial." Those who 
have read the " Bhagavad Gita " know that it contains 
the essence of the Vedas, as well as all the truths ex- 
pounded by the Vedanta philosophy. The passage 
runs thus: 

" Never the Spirit was born; the Spirit will cease to be never; 
Never was time it was not; End and Beginning are dreams! 
Birthless and Deathless and Changeless remaineth the Spirit 

forever; 
Death has not touched it at all, dead though the house of it 

seems!" 

Again, in the same chapter of the 24th edition Mrs. 
Eddy says: "The ancient Hindoo philosophers un- 
derstood something of this principle when they said 
in the Celestial Song, according to an old prose trans- 
lation : ' The wise neither grieve for the dead nor for 



CHRISTIAN SCIENCE AND VEDANTA. 3 

the living. I myself never was not, nor thou, nor all 
the princes of the earth; nor shall we ever hereafter 
cease to be. As the soul in this mortal frame findeth 
infancy, youth, and old age; so in some future frame 
will it find the like. One who is confirmed in this belief 
is not disturbed by anything that may come to pass. 
The sensibility of the faculties giveth heat and cold, 
pleasure and pain; which come and go and are tran- 
sient and inconstant. Bear them with patience, for the 
wise man whom these disturb not, and to whom pain 
and pleasure are the same, is formed for immortal- 
ity.' " (p. 259.) This is a quotation from one of the 
old translations of the " Bhagavad Gita " by Charles 
Wilkins, published in London in 1785 and in New 
York in 1867. In recent editions of " Science and 
Health " this has been omitted, perhaps to show that 
the founder of Christian Science did not draw the 
water of truth from any other fountain than the Chris- 
tian Bible. 

Now let us compare the leading propositions of 
Christian Science with those of the Vedanta philos- 
ophy. In the 193d edition of " Science and Health " 
(p. 70) these propositions are said to be four in 
number : First, God is all in all. Second, God is good, 
God is mind. Third, God, spirit, being all, nothing is 
matter. Fourth, Life, God, omnipotent Good, deny 
death, evil, sin, disease. Disease, sin, evil, death, deny 
God, omnipotent Good, life. Which of the denials 
in proposition fourth is true? Both cannot be true. 
These four propositions form the four main pillars 
upon which rests the structure of Christian Science. 



4~ VEDANTA PHILOSOPHY. 

A critical student of philosophy, however, can reduce 
these four to two. First, accept God, who is spirit, mind, 
life, being, omnipotent good, and all in all. Second, 
deny matter and that which exists beside God. Accord- 
ing to Christian Science, God, spirit, life, mind, being, 
omnipotent, infinite good, all these terms are synony- 
mous and are applicable to the one real substance 
of the universe ; and in the same manner, matter, sin, 
disease, ignorance, error, and illusion are also synony- 
mous terms, which can be applied to that which exists 
as distinct and separate from the God of Christian Sci- 
ence. It has no existence, no reality. Therefore the 
whole phenomenal world with its innumerable* appear- 
ances.does not exist in reality. It is like a mirage, an 
illusion or dream of the mortal mind. But the mortal 
mind itself falls under the head of illusion, too; be- 
cause we read on p. 8, 193d edition of " Science and 
Health ": "Mortal mind implies something untrue, 
and therefore unreal, and, as the phrase is used in 
teaching Christian Science, it is meant to designate 
that which has no real existence." The world is an 
illusion that is seen by the illusion of the mortal mind ; 
but the question arises, Whence comes this illusion? 
What causes it? Christian Science does not answer. 
It simply says, " Mind or God is not the author of 
matter and the creator of ideas is not the creator of 
illusions." (" Science and Health," 193d edition, p. 

145.) 

Thus, according to Christian Science, if God, or 
spirit, life, being, absolute, omnipotent good, be all in 
all and Truth, then the phenomenal universe, includ- 



CHRISTIAN SCIENCE AND VEDANTA. 5 

ing matter and mortal mind, is nothing but an illu- 
sion; it does not exist in reality; it has no reality and 
no existence. 

Now let us see what the Vedaiita philosophers said 
on this point centuries before the birth of Christ. In 
this pre-Christian era a disciple went to a spiritual 
master and asked : " Sir, please tell me in a few words 
the fundamental principles of the Vedanta philos- 
ophy." The spiritual master, who was a seer of Truth, 
replied : " I will tell you in half a couplet the funda- 
mental principles of the Vedanta philosophy that have 
been declared by millions of volumes. Brahman, or 
the absolute, infinite, and eternal Being, is Truth ; the 
world is false or unreal, and the individual soul is no 
other than Brahman or the absolute Truth, which is 
absolute existence, intelligence, and bliss." This is 
the quintessence of Vedanta philosophy. 

In Christian Science the word " God " is used to 
signify the absolute reality or unchangeable truth of 
the universe ; so, in Vedanta philosophy, the Sanskrit 
word Brahman is used to designate that all-pervading 
substance, or absolute Being, which is the reality of 
the universe. This unchangeable reality of the uni- 
verse, furthermore, forms the reality of all living 
creatures and all mortal things, everything that we can 
see, hear, or perceive with our senses. If Brahman, 
or the absolute Being whose nature is absolute exist- 
ence, intelligence, and bliss, be the one reality and all 
in all, it must be one, because there cannot be many 
absolutes or infinites. Absolute must be one, and in- 
finite must be one. As we find this idea in reading 



6 VEDANTA PHILOSOPHY. 

"Science and Health," so we find it also in the 
Vedanta philosophy. Granting, then, that the abso- 
lute reality is one, the question naturally presents 
itself : Why do we see so great a variety in the phe- 
nomenal universe? And what is the cause of this 
variety? 

In answering this question, the Vedanta philosophy 
gives two theories. The first is the theory of illusion, 
and the second is the theory of evolution. The 
theory of illusion is very old ; we find it formulated in 
the Vedas, and it was taught by some of the seers 
of the Vedic period. It was maintained and preached 
by Buddha, who lived 540 years before Christ, and 
by his followers; w T hile later it was explained with 
great clearness by Sankaracharya, the best exponent 
of the Vedanta philosophy, who lived in India in the 
sixth century after Christ. This theory of illusion is 
the most difficult of all theories for the ordinary mind 
to grasp. Even the subtlest logicians and the pro- 
foundest thinkers often fail to understand how this 
phenomenal world, which we perceive with our senses 
and which appears so real to us, can be unreal or 
illusory. If, however, Vedanta philosophy declares 
this phenomenal universe to be unreal and false, it 
does not deny its existence as does Christian Science. 
It does not say that mortal mind or matter is nothing; 
but, on the contrary, it is most careful to define the 
terms unreal and illusion. By these words Vedanta 
philosophy does not mean negation, but phenomenal 
or relative existence, or reality conditioned by time 
and space. It admits that this phenomenal world is 



I 



CHRISTIAN SCIENCE AND VEDANTA. 7 

unreal from the standpoint of the absolute or noume- 
non, but at the same time it says that it has as much 
(conditional) reality in it as anything presented to us 
by the senses can ever have. 

Although Vedanta philosophy agrees with Chris- 
tian Science in its fundamental principles, there is still 
a great difference between their respective modes of 
expressing the same truths. Christian Science, by 
denying the existence of matter and mortal mind, 
denies the existence of the phenomenal world and re- 
duces it to nothingness. This reminds us of conclu- 
sions reached by some of the nihilistic philosophers 
of India and Europe. Hume denied the existence of 
mind and matter. He reduced the whole universe to 
a bundle of sensations, impressions, and ideas. Some 
of the Buddhist philosophers in India denied the exist- 
ence of the universe in the same way. But this 
method creates great confusion in the minds of the 
people. For instance, I am standing before you and 
speaking, and you are listening; if we follow the 
teachings of Christian Science strictly, we shall have 
to deny that I am standing here and that you are sit- 
ting there. In other terms, the speaker is nothing, 
the hearer is nothing, the mortal mind is nothing; con- 
sequently, thoughts and ideas are nothing, the words 
expressed by the mortal mind are also nothing. Not 
only this, but the very act of denying is nothing, be- 
cause the act of denying is the act of the mortal mind ; 
it cannot be the act of an absolute or divine mind. 
" Where God is, no other thing can exist " ; so there 
cannot be the denial of anything in God; the divine 



8 VEDANTA PHILOSOPHY. 

mind cannot see anything outside of itself, and as 
mortal mind is nothing, therefore the denial itself is 
nothing. 

This difficulty does not arise in Vedanta philosophy, 
because it does not deny the existence of matter, mind, 
and everything that is on the phenomenal plane. Al- 
though it tells us that the world is unreal, that matter 
is unreal, mind unreal; still it recognizes their 
existence, but adds that that existence cannot be 
separated from the absolute existence. If Brahman, 
or the absolute existence, be all in all, then everything 
that exists on the phenomenal plane is in reality Brah- 
man, or the absolute Truth. The reality of the 
chair, the table, the earth, the sun, moon, and stars is 
the absolute existence, is divinity itself. The reality 
in you, in me, and in all living creatures is the same as 
the absolute reality of the universe; only, on account 
of names and forms, the one Reality appears to be 
many. As, for instance, the one substance, clay, ap- 
pears through diverse names and forms in numberless 
varieties, such as pots, jars, bricks, etc., so the one ab- 
solute Reality, when clothed with varying names and 
forms, appears to be sun, moon, stars, animals, vege- 
tables, etc. Matter and mind, according to Vedanta, 
are not two separate entities, but different expressions 
of the one eternal substance, which is called Brahman 
in Vedanta and God in Christian Science. 

Instead of insistently denying the existence of mat- 
ter, mortal mind, and objective phenomena, Vedanta 
tells us how to see through the multiplicity of names 
and forms the one unchangeable Being which stands 



CHRISTIAN SCIENCE AND VEDANTA. 9 

as the background of all objects of material existence 
and gives reality to all. The names and forms have 
of course no absolute reality, but they have conditional 
reality ; or, in other words, they exist in relation to our 
minds. The world is real, according to Vedanta, but 
at the same time it is not as it seems to be; it is not 
that which appears to us at the present moment. This 
is what is meant by " illusion " in Vedanta. For ex- 
ample, here is a chair; the substance of this chair is 
the absolute reality, because the absolute reality is 
all-pervading and one. It is in you, in me, in the 
table, and in everything, and that which gives reality 
to the chair is one with the absolute reality. But the 
chair appears as chair only so long as it is clothed 
with the name and form of chair. If we can mentally 
separate the name and form from the substance of the 
chair, that which will be left will be common wood ; 
take away the name and form of wood, atoms and 
molecules will remain ; take away the name and form 
of atoms and molecules, there will be left nothing but 
eternal energy, and that is inseparable from the ab- 
solute substance. In this way, if we can mentally 
separate the names and forms from the substance, all 
phenomenal objects can be reduced to one substance 
which is the absolute reality of the universe. 

Thus, Vedanta, while giving the most logical reason 
for the variety of phenomena, does not deny the exist- 
ence of anything. On the contrary, it tells us that the 
real existence or true substance of everything is Brah- 
man or absolute reality, or God, as Christian Science 
calls it. The whole universe is like one infinite ocean 



Id VEDANTA PHILOSOPHY. 

of reality, which is nameless and formless, and in that 
ocean, waves and bubbles rise spontaneously and take 
different names and forms. These waves and bubbles 
are the objects of the phenomenal universe. As in 
the ocean, waves and bubbles have no existence sepa- 
rate from or independent of the ocean itself, so the 
waves and bubbles known as the phenomenal objects 
of the universe have no existence separate from or 
independent of the ocean of Reality. We are like so 
many bubbles in the infinite ocean of reality ; we owe 
our existence to that ocean, live there, and play for 
a while, then merge into it to reappear in some other 
form. Such is the conception of Vedanta concerning 
the relation of phenomena to the absolute noumenon, 
or the unchangeable Truth which underlies all phe- 
nomenal names and forms. 

Christian Science, taking its stand on the Bible, 
tries to defend its position by wonderfully clever inter- 
pretations >of scriptural passages, in which the mean- 
ing of each passage is stretched to its utmost limit. 
Common sense, however, prevents many from accept- 
ing such interpretations, as they depend neither upon 
logic nor upon reason, but upon the authority of an 
inspired founder. Vedanta philosophy explains the 
same truths without resting its evidence upon any 
book or upon the authority of any man or woman 
whether of antiquity or of our day. It has no founder, 
consequently it does not demand allegiance to any one 
or to any thing save Truth. Christian Science, again, 
by denying the phenomenal universe, places itself at 
variance with all science and all philosophy. It also 



CHRISTIAN SCIENCE AND VEDANTA. [II 

defies all modern scientific methods by restricting its 
field of investigation to that which is mentioned in the 
one copyrighted volume called " Science and Health "; 
whereas the Vedanta philosophy, admitting the exist- 
ence and relative reality of the phenomenal universe 
of mind and matter, accepts all the truths that have 
been discovered by science or philosophy or by the 
Seers of Truth in all countries and in all ages. At 
the same time, it tells us that the realm of science and 
philosophy lies within the limits of time and space and 
that they cannot, in consequence, go beyond relative 
reality. Christian Science does not see any harmony 
between absolute Truth and the scientific truths dis- 
covered by so-called mortal mind ; but Vedanta, on the 
contrary, sees perfect harmony underlying all the laws 
and phases of truth which human minds have dis- 
covered. Truth being one, whether it be discovered by 
science, philosophy, or religion, it is the same truth. 
It cannot be many; why should we deny its diverse 
aspects as long as we are on the phenomenal plane? 
Christian Science, to go further, is notably un- 
charitable towards everything not sanctioned by its 
founder, while Vedanta philosophy declares that truth 
is universal and cannot be monopolized by any man 
or woman of any country. Christian Science rejects 
the doctrine of evolution and upholds the belief in 
special creation as described in the Book of Genesis, 
attempting to explain the account there given by the 
idealistic theory which was adopted by Bishop Berke- 
ley and by a host of other idealists of ancient and 
modern times. Vedanta accepts the doctrine of evo- 

LofC. 



12 VEDANTA PHILOSOPHY. 

lution and shows that of special creation to be absurd. 
It also courts free investigation in the realm of nature 
without imposing the condition that the results of all 
such investigations be in accord with the tenets of a 
specific book or of some one teacher; and it thus 
emancipates the human soul from bondage to any one 
set of scriptures or to personal authority. 

In this age of agnosticism and materialism Chris- 
tian Science has done an admirable work, in making 
people realize that this phenomenal world of ours is 
like a dreamland, and that all objects of sense are noth- 
ing more than objects seen in a dream. This is no 
small gain for Western minds ; because the more we 
realize that this world is like a dream, the nearer we 
approach to absolute Truth. In this respect, what 
Christian Science is at present trying to do in this 
country has been done by Vedanta in India for 
centuries. Furthermore, Christian Science has ren- 
dered a great service to humanity by demonstrat- 
ing the power of the mind over the body, the 
power of spirit over matter. Although this fact 
was in no way new to the spiritual teachers, 
sages, and best thinkers of every country, still 
in no other country and at no other time had there 
ever been so well organized a movement as that 
recently started by Mrs. Eddy under the name of 
Christian Science. Like Vedanta, it has brought 
health to many diseased bodies and .rest to many 
diseased minds. Dazzled, however, by their wonder- 
ful success in healing, Christian Scientists lay ex- 
clusive claim to the method of healing given by Mrs. 



CHRISTIAN SCIENCE AND VEDANTA. 13 

Eddy, declaring it to be the only right method ; while 
all others, adopted by mental scientists, metaphysical 
healers, and other kindred sects, are wrong and un- 
scientific. We must not, however, let these extrava- 
gant claims made by the over-enthusiastic followers 
of Mrs. Eddy, blind us to the fact that the power of 
healing is the property of every individual soul. Any 
one can develop the gift of healing and cure disease 
by the mind without becoming a Christian Scientist 
and without reading a page of " Science and Health/' 
There have been many remarkable healers in every 
country,— among the Hindus, the Buddhists, the Ma- 
hommadans, and those of other religious creeds. It is 
a great mistake to think that the power of healing 
comes from any outside source or from belief in this 
or that. It is developed by living a right life in ac- 
cordance with the moral and spiritual laws of nature. 
Christian Science teaches that the power of healing 
was first shown to the world by Jesus the Christ and 
His disciples, and asserts that no one ever manifested 
that kind of healing power before He appeared upon 
earth ; but if we read the religious history of the world 
carefully, we find that long before the birth of Christ, 
the same healing power of the mind or spirit was 
practised by the followers of Buddha with marvellous 
success. Wherever Buddhist missionaries travelled, 
they healed the sick without using drugs. The yogis 
in India also use no drugs in curing disease, but rely 
entirely upon the spiritual power which they acquire 
through right living and the practice of yoga. 

Christian Scientists, in laying such stress upon the 



14 VEDANTA PHILOSOPHY. 

miraculous and exclusive power of healing manifested 
by Jesus, are evidently ignorant of the fact that sim- 
ilar Christlike healing powers were displayed by 
Esculapius, the ancient Greek, who was proclaimed the 
savior of mankind because of these very powers. He 
not only cured the sick of the most malignant diseases, 
but even raised the dead. Eusebius, the ecclesiastical 
historian, wrote in glowing terms of the gift of healing 
possessed by him. For many years after the death 
af Esculapius, furthermore, miracles continued to be 
wrought through the efficacy of faith in his name. 
Christlike healing powers, again, were shown and 
miracles performed by Apollonius of Tyana, who was a 
contemporary of Jesus of Nazareth. The lives of Hindu 
sages, Buddhist monks, and of the yogis of India 
are filled with such descriptions of miraculous cures 
and even of the raising of the dead. Vedanta philoso- 
phy, being fully cognizant of these facts, cannot there- 
fore admit with the Christian Scientist that Jesus was 
the first to exercise this power. On the contrary, it 
teaches that the power of healing is universal and can- 
not be confined within the boundaries of any one 
creed, sect, religion, or book. 

Christian Science makes good health the standard 
of spirituality, a position which the most superficial 
observation disproves; since if good health be the 
standard of spirituality, then all those who enjoy per- 
fect health should be exceptionally spiritual. The 
savages who live in close touch with nature, sleep 
under the trees, walk barefooted, and eat raw food 
should, because of their physical vigor, be the most 



CHRISTIAN SCIENCE AND VEDANTA. 15 

spiritual of all ; yet we know that this is not the case. 
For this reason Vedanta does not make good health 
the standard of spirituality. Nor does it stop with the 
denial of disease, pain, and evil. It goes a step further 
and says, If you deny disease, pain, sorrow, and evil, 
why should you not also deny the existence of health 
and the pleasures of the body and mind? because, in 
this world of relativity, the one is just as much dream- 
like as the other. If disease be a dream, good health is 
likewise a dream. Why not? Good is good so long 
as it stands in relation to its opposite evil ; otherwise 
it can have no existence. Some say that God is good; 
but that word good cannot be used in its absolute 
sense, because it creates confusion ; that which is good 
demands something which is better and something 
best. If you say that God is good, the question 
naturally arises, who is better and who is best ? 

By denying evil its correlative is also denied; so 
with pain and pleasure, health and disease. If you 
deny ill health, you deny good health also. Therefore, 
logically speaking, Christian Science preaches, con- 
sciously or unconsciously, a dogma that is based on 
logical inconsistency. In Vedanta no such inconsist- 
encies can be found, because it exhorts us to rise above 
both good and evil, pleasure and pain, sickness and 
health. 

The curing of disease is a very good thing so long 
as we recognize disease, so long as we admit its exist- 
ence and in the dream of ignorance seek good health, 
or try to avoid suffering and ill health ; but the mo- 
ment that we realize that our nature is above all rela- 



1 6 VEDANTA PHILOSOPHY. 

tivity, above pleasure and pain, above conditions of 
mind and body, we cease to talk of disease or health. 
No disease, no pain, no sorrow or suffering, either 
physical or mental, can affect or touch the soul; 
neither a healthy body nor a healthy mind can enrich 
the perfect Being, which is divine, immortal, un- 
changeable, which is the Soul of our souls and which 
dwells in each individual. So why should we trouble 
ourselves first to deny disease and then to try to cure 

it? 

Christian Science teaches a religion which rests en- 
tirely upon the Bible, which in turn is limited by the 
interpretations of Mrs. Mary Baker G. Eddy. These 
interpretations, furthermore, are often so obscure and 
occult that it requires an unusual mind to grasp their 
import. Few people of ordinary intelligence, even 
after hours of study, can understand clearly what the 
author means. At the same time Christian Science 
insists that only through an unquestioning acceptance 
of these interpretations can the Truth be reached. 
Those, on the other hand, who do not accept them, are 
cast relentlessly into the abyss of error. There is no 
hope for them, since they are completely in the wrong. 
By this attitude alone the religion of Christian Science 
lays itself open to the charge of dogmatism, sectari- 
anism, and lack of charity towards all other faiths and 
religious systems; while Vedanta philosophy teaches 
a religion which is not based upon any book or its 
interpretation by any man or woman, but upon uni- 
versal truth and upon the eternal laws that govern our 
souls and our lives. It teaches that religion which 



CHRISTIAN SCIENCE AND VEDANTA, 1 7 

underlies all special religions, and which has no par- 
ticular name, no creed, no fixed form of worship, and 
no label of authority stamped upon it by any specific 
founder. It preaches the truth boldly, and at the same 
time accepts all the phases of truth discovered by 
scientists, philosophers, and seers of truth everywhere 
and in all ages, while enough room is left in the re- 
ligion of Yedanta for the admission of any truths that 
may be discovered in the future. Thus Yedanta es- 
tablishes the foundation of a universal religion, em- 
bracing the teachings of Jesus, of Buddha, Krishna, 
Confucius, Zoroaster, of Mohammed, and all other 
spiritual teachers of the past and of those who will 
come in the future ; while it proclaims in a trumpet 
voice to the world : 

" That which is eternal in the midst of non-eternal 
phenomena, which is the life of all living creatures, 
which is the infinite source of consciousness, is one. 
It is also the bestower of happiness to all. Eternal 
happiness comes to those alone who realize this abso- 
lute oneness ; to them comes unbounded joy and 
peace, and to none else, to none else." 



Jta. 16 1008 



i ihiii ni^i^iliiiii^iiiii C0NGRESS § 

029 819 7017 

POBLICATIONS OF THE YEDJNTA SOCIETY 

LECTURES BY SWAMI VIVEKANANDA 

THE IDEAL OF A UNIVERSAL RELIGION. 

THE COSMOS. 

THE ATM AN. 

THE REAL AND APPARENT MAN. 

BH A KIT YOGA. 

WORLD'S FAIR ADDRESSES, 10 cents each ; i cent each for postage. 

MY MASTER. Just out. Bound, 50 cents; postage 2 cents. 

THE VEDANTA PHILOSOPHY.— An Address before the Graduate 
Philosophical Society of Harvard College ; with introduction by Prof. 
C. C. Everett. 15 cents; 2 cents for postage. 

KARMA YOGA (8 lectures), bound. New and revised edition, $1.00. 
5 cents postage. 

RAJA YOGA. New edition, 376 pages, bound, $1.50; 11 cents postage. 

LECTURES BY SWAMI ABHEDANANDA 

THE WAY TO THE BLESSED LIFE. 

SCIENTIFIC BASIS OF RELIGION. 

COSMIC EVOLUTION AND IIS PURPOSE. 

THE PHILOSOPHY OF GOOD AND EVIL. 

DOKS THE SOUL EXIST AFTER DEATH? 

THE RELATION OF SOUL TO GOD. 

THE WORD AND THE CROSS IN ANCIENT INDIA. 

THE MOTHERHOOD OF GOD. 

10 cents each; 1 cent each for postage. 
The set of eight lectures bound in cloth, $1.00; postage 5 cents. 

WHY A HINDU IS A VEGETARIAN. 

DIVINE COMMUNION. 

RELIGION OF THE HINDUS. 

WHY A HINDU ACCEPTS CHRIST AND REJECTS CHURCHIANITY. 

WHO IS THE SAVIOUR OF SOULS? 

WOMAN'S PLACE IN HINDU RELIGION. 

10 cents each ; 1 cent each for postage. 

REINCARNATION (3 lectures), paper, 25 cents; cloth, 40 cents; postage 
; 2 and 5 cents each. 

SPIRITUAL UNFOLDMENT (3 lectures), paper, 25 cents; cloth, 40 cents; 
postage 2 and 5 cents each. 



PERIODICALS 

AWAKENED INDIA, monthly, $1.00 a year; Single copy, JO cents. 
THE BR AHMAVADIN, monthly, $2.00 a year; Single copy, 20 cents. 

These magazines are published in India, and contain articles and lectures by 
the Swamis. 

Orders received and promptly filled by 

PUBLICATION COMMITTEE 

OF THE VEDANTA SOCIETY. 



029 819 701 7 



